If you raised the minimum wage the cost of products would go up. (Because we all know that shareholders and the people that run corporations are never going to want to be the ones taking the hit) However if you adjusted the minimum wage from what it was in 1968 to today it would be over 10 dollars an hour! Keep in mind that was the minimum wage. It's kind of embarrassing considering where it is now. We weren't on the verge of collapse from the prices of products then. In fact that might have been the best economic period our country has ever been in. I don't even think that figure is adjusted for increases in the cost of living. Now not only do people at that level of income make a lot less than they would have in the past but the cost of things like fuel, homes, cars and other things is more expensive than it's ever been making the situation worse. Sure clothing, food, and junky appliances, are cheaper than before, but that's because almost all the clothing is made in foreign sweatshops costing us jobs. The food is cheaper than in the past if you only count the vast amounts of fat, cheap, and greasy food and the other things we have done to other food to maximize production (like adding hormones to everything). If you ever tried to eat nothing but healthy food you would soon learn how much more expensive it is than buying some box of goodies they just shove full of sugar, starch and salt. Sure it gives you a lot of calories, but it's not good to eat, and the poor usually end up buying more of that stuff because of its cheapness. I also think people forget that if more people made more money they could afford the greater prices. The government would even benefit. So many of our taxes are regressive that if the poorer took a larger chunk of the money they would probably get more in taxes instead of it going to the richer who get more tax breaks so they get to keep it. Of course the people that are better off than those making the minimum would be affected negatively more but that leads me to another thing...
Raising the minimum wage is also about social justice, not just economics. I'm not one of those people that thinks it's ok to just totally remove morality and ethics from an economic system because it makes numbers look good at the bottom of a sheet. At a certain point you have to respect another persons human dignity, and I believe an honest days work should get an honest days pay. I would think after a time everybody would realize it's not good to exploit others for your own gain. I know this is an old saying but, there is no free lunch in this world. All those low prices that people like paying, they don't come out of thin air. Somewhere, one way or another somebody has to pay for that, whether that is somebody making near minimum wage or somebody in another country working in near slave like conditions because they have no other choice. That's easy to forget about when you walk into some store and pick out an item. The process that goes to get it there is out of sight out of mind so nobody has to think about the consequences of their actions when they buy it. For a lot of people out there just assume that people making near the minimum are burger flippers or teenagers working after school. That isn’t always the case, not anymore at least. There are a lot of adults working tough adult jobs for low money. You would be surprised at what some people make. For example, I think in one area around here paramedics only make a little above seven dollars an hour.
All the things I have learned about money, the economy, and life has taught me one thing. You cannot maximize profit and do the right thing or make a good product, or treat your employees well for that matter. It just doesn't happen and it will never happen. The mercenary like capitalistic, free trade, free market ideas some people have don't work. (Or they only work for a select group of people, which is the problem) I don't know why in this day in age more people haven't come to that obvious conclusion. Part of that is why I think Economics is one of the dumbest subjects that is taught. Unlike other subjects where almost all the experts agree on most things, I have never seen a subject that has so many people off in so many directions at once. I sometimes wonder if they use a magic 8-ball to come to their conclusions. I listen to them and wonder if most of them know what they are taking about. I liken it to being with an engineer who tells you that something works out on paper and by his calculations, and then when you come back and tell him it doesn’t work he doesn’t want to accept it. It is also one of the few things that people will adamantly adhere to a philosophy or theory that negatively affects people in the face of common sense and proof to the contrary in the hopes that their theories will someday pan out somehow. All those theories that the most free market among us have thought would make a better society just aren't working out, because like I stated before maximizing profit and doing the right thing don’t go together. Also, at some point, because of the culture of the business and the rich, I think the concept of competition doesn't even work out how people thought it would. Instead of the best product for the lowest prices, it's become a race to the bottom to see who can cut the most corners to make something that is barely acceptable so we grudgingly accept buying it. (Assuming it’s something we don’t need to buy. If it’s a necessity then they can skimp even more)
Raising the minimum wage is also about social justice, not just economics. I'm not one of those people that thinks it's ok to just totally remove morality and ethics from an economic system because it makes numbers look good at the bottom of a sheet. At a certain point you have to respect another persons human dignity, and I believe an honest days work should get an honest days pay. I would think after a time everybody would realize it's not good to exploit others for your own gain. I know this is an old saying but, there is no free lunch in this world. All those low prices that people like paying, they don't come out of thin air. Somewhere, one way or another somebody has to pay for that, whether that is somebody making near minimum wage or somebody in another country working in near slave like conditions because they have no other choice. That's easy to forget about when you walk into some store and pick out an item. The process that goes to get it there is out of sight out of mind so nobody has to think about the consequences of their actions when they buy it. For a lot of people out there just assume that people making near the minimum are burger flippers or teenagers working after school. That isn’t always the case, not anymore at least. There are a lot of adults working tough adult jobs for low money. You would be surprised at what some people make. For example, I think in one area around here paramedics only make a little above seven dollars an hour.
All the things I have learned about money, the economy, and life has taught me one thing. You cannot maximize profit and do the right thing or make a good product, or treat your employees well for that matter. It just doesn't happen and it will never happen. The mercenary like capitalistic, free trade, free market ideas some people have don't work. (Or they only work for a select group of people, which is the problem) I don't know why in this day in age more people haven't come to that obvious conclusion. Part of that is why I think Economics is one of the dumbest subjects that is taught. Unlike other subjects where almost all the experts agree on most things, I have never seen a subject that has so many people off in so many directions at once. I sometimes wonder if they use a magic 8-ball to come to their conclusions. I listen to them and wonder if most of them know what they are taking about. I liken it to being with an engineer who tells you that something works out on paper and by his calculations, and then when you come back and tell him it doesn’t work he doesn’t want to accept it. It is also one of the few things that people will adamantly adhere to a philosophy or theory that negatively affects people in the face of common sense and proof to the contrary in the hopes that their theories will someday pan out somehow. All those theories that the most free market among us have thought would make a better society just aren't working out, because like I stated before maximizing profit and doing the right thing don’t go together. Also, at some point, because of the culture of the business and the rich, I think the concept of competition doesn't even work out how people thought it would. Instead of the best product for the lowest prices, it's become a race to the bottom to see who can cut the most corners to make something that is barely acceptable so we grudgingly accept buying it. (Assuming it’s something we don’t need to buy. If it’s a necessity then they can skimp even more)